Breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity model

Abstract Background Papillary carcinoma is an uncommon type of breast cancer. Additionally, patients with huge breast papillary carcinoma are extremely rare in clinical practice. To improve therapeutic effect on such patients, it is urgent to explore biologically and clinically relevant models of th...

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Main Authors: Xuelu Li, Bo Pan, Xiaoqing Song, Ning Li, Dongyi Zhao, Man Li, Zuowei Zhao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-03-01
Series:Cancer Cell International
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12935-020-01171-5
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spelling doaj-9d758d7420df4fe29f66f3a831f7cea02020-11-25T01:39:23ZengBMCCancer Cell International1475-28672020-03-0120111010.1186/s12935-020-01171-5Breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity modelXuelu Li0Bo Pan1Xiaoqing Song2Ning Li3Dongyi Zhao4Man Li5Zuowei Zhao6Department of Oncology & Department of Breast Surgery, The Second Hospital of Dalian Medical UniversityDepartment of Oncology & Department of Breast Surgery, The Second Hospital of Dalian Medical UniversityDepartment of Pathology, First Affiliated Hospital and College of Basic Medical Sciences, China Medical UniversityDepartment of Foreign Language, Dalian Medical UniversityDepartment of Oncology & Department of Breast Surgery, The Second Hospital of Dalian Medical UniversityDepartment of Oncology & Department of Breast Surgery, The Second Hospital of Dalian Medical UniversityDepartment of Oncology & Department of Breast Surgery, The Second Hospital of Dalian Medical UniversityAbstract Background Papillary carcinoma is an uncommon type of breast cancer. Additionally, patients with huge breast papillary carcinoma are extremely rare in clinical practice. To improve therapeutic effect on such patients, it is urgent to explore biologically and clinically relevant models of the disease to discover effective drugs. Methods We collected surgical tumor specimens from a 63-year-old Chinese woman who has been diagnosed breast papillary carcinoma. The tumor was more than 15 cm in diameter, and applied to establish patient-derived papillary carcinoma organoids that could continuously propagate for more than 6 months. Results The papillary carcinoma organoids matched the histological characteristics of orginal tumor by H&E staining identification, and maintained the expression of the breast cancer biomarkers by IHC, including estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), human epidermal growth factor receptor (HER2) and antigen Ki-67 (Ki67). In addition, we performed a 3-D drug screening to examine the effects of endocrine drugs (Fulvestrant, Tamoxifen) and targeted therapy drugs (Palbociclib, Everolimus, BKM120) on breast papillary carcinoma in the mimic in vivo environment. The drug sensitivities of our breast papillary carcinoma organoids were investigated as follows, Fulvestrant (IC50 0.275 μmol), Palbociclib (IC50 2.21 μmol), BKM120 (IC50 3.81 μmol), Everolimus (IC50 4.45 μmol), Tamoxifen (IC50 19.13 μmol). Conclusions These results showed that an effective organoid platform for 3-D in vitro culture of breast cancer organoids from patients with breast papillary carcinoma could be used to identify possible treatments, and might be commonly applied to explore clinicopathological characteristics of breast papillary carcinoma.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12935-020-01171-5Papillary carcinomaOrganoid cultureIndividualized therapyDrug sensitivity testBreast cancer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xuelu Li
Bo Pan
Xiaoqing Song
Ning Li
Dongyi Zhao
Man Li
Zuowei Zhao
spellingShingle Xuelu Li
Bo Pan
Xiaoqing Song
Ning Li
Dongyi Zhao
Man Li
Zuowei Zhao
Breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity model
Cancer Cell International
Papillary carcinoma
Organoid culture
Individualized therapy
Drug sensitivity test
Breast cancer
author_facet Xuelu Li
Bo Pan
Xiaoqing Song
Ning Li
Dongyi Zhao
Man Li
Zuowei Zhao
author_sort Xuelu Li
title Breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity model
title_short Breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity model
title_full Breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity model
title_fullStr Breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity model
title_full_unstemmed Breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity model
title_sort breast cancer organoids from a patient with giant papillary carcinoma as a high-fidelity model
publisher BMC
series Cancer Cell International
issn 1475-2867
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Abstract Background Papillary carcinoma is an uncommon type of breast cancer. Additionally, patients with huge breast papillary carcinoma are extremely rare in clinical practice. To improve therapeutic effect on such patients, it is urgent to explore biologically and clinically relevant models of the disease to discover effective drugs. Methods We collected surgical tumor specimens from a 63-year-old Chinese woman who has been diagnosed breast papillary carcinoma. The tumor was more than 15 cm in diameter, and applied to establish patient-derived papillary carcinoma organoids that could continuously propagate for more than 6 months. Results The papillary carcinoma organoids matched the histological characteristics of orginal tumor by H&E staining identification, and maintained the expression of the breast cancer biomarkers by IHC, including estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), human epidermal growth factor receptor (HER2) and antigen Ki-67 (Ki67). In addition, we performed a 3-D drug screening to examine the effects of endocrine drugs (Fulvestrant, Tamoxifen) and targeted therapy drugs (Palbociclib, Everolimus, BKM120) on breast papillary carcinoma in the mimic in vivo environment. The drug sensitivities of our breast papillary carcinoma organoids were investigated as follows, Fulvestrant (IC50 0.275 μmol), Palbociclib (IC50 2.21 μmol), BKM120 (IC50 3.81 μmol), Everolimus (IC50 4.45 μmol), Tamoxifen (IC50 19.13 μmol). Conclusions These results showed that an effective organoid platform for 3-D in vitro culture of breast cancer organoids from patients with breast papillary carcinoma could be used to identify possible treatments, and might be commonly applied to explore clinicopathological characteristics of breast papillary carcinoma.
topic Papillary carcinoma
Organoid culture
Individualized therapy
Drug sensitivity test
Breast cancer
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12935-020-01171-5
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